The concept of trust has been used in a growing number of empirical and theoretical marketing studies of business to business relationships. Examination of a number of in¯uential studies indicates a lack of clarity in their conceptualization of trust. The nature of this lack of clarity is examined and it is proposed that there are a number of features of trust which account should be taken of when conducting such studies.
Different theories make different assumptions about the mechanisms that govern economic transactions and there are several reviews that have summarized existing conceptual and empirical work associated with such frameworks as transaction cost analysis or agency theory. However, Macneil's Relational Contracting Theory, another major theoretical foundation of current marketing research into business relationships, has not yet received similar attention. This article provides a review of a core concept developed in this stream of literature: the norm concept. It contrasts Macneil's view of norms with the work developed in the field of marketing. As a result, the authors identify, first, a gap between Macneil's interpretation of the norm concept and the application made by marketing scholars and second, contradictions in the results obtained from empirical marketing research.
The dichotomy ‘market’ or ‘hierarchy’ has exercised a dominant influence on the study of forms of governance and their operation for some time. However, in the past two decades there have been large numbers of investigations of intermediate forms of governance. Subsequently it has been recognized that the behaviour that occurs within exchanges is not determined by the forms of governance used and this points to a need to understand behaviour within a variety of exchanges. An apparatus, based on Macneil’s analysis, in conjunction with Menger’s insights into the nature of exchanges, for describing behaviour within exchanges is proposed.
Firms enter into exchanges so that they can create value for themselves as well as their customers. Day's concept of customer value equations is reviewed and the concept of supplier value equations is introduced. Then the manner in which these two types of value equation can be used to identify opportunities for enhancing supplier and customer value is demonstrated.
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